Hospitals may soon be dragged into the modern day with the Feather, an iPad supporting medical cart. Read more
Doctor Doctor, I’ve Got An iPad Stuck Up My…
Fraser Speirs’ Update on the iPad Project→
Fraser Speirs’ Update on the iPad Project
So many people have asked me to explain the educational impact of the iPad. I simply can’t yet get to grips with everything that’s happening. Put simply, the iPad deployment has transformed our school. Not evenly and not everywhere yet, but it’s coming.
What we’re reaching in some classes is the transformation stage. We’re seeing the iPad completely change the way that certain subjects are taught. Our best example so far is Art. I will write and share more about what we’re doing in Art over time but it’s fair to say that it is already far beyond anything I expected in the first year, let alone the first month.
In case you missed it, the iPad Project is the first real-world deployment of iPads in classroom.
Elements 1.1: New UI and Improved Usability
Elements is the best Dropbox-powered text editor currently available in the App Store, and the latest 1.1 update, which was approved earlier today, brings many improvements and fixes users have been asking for since the first release of the app.
A new UI, if you were not a fan of the previous “marble-like” one, with subtle navigation bars and backgrounds. Elements now comes with full-text search for your documents stored in Dropbox, so you’ll be able to either enter a title or some text and start searching. You can also rename and delete files, sort them by modified date or title.
Last, lots of fixes and “under the hood” improvements. Elements is still available at $4.99 in the App Store, and the 1.1 version is more recommended than ever. Check out the full press release and screenshots below. Read more
Developers More Interested In Android Than iOS
Although Apple is still dominant in the mobile space, Android is quickly gaining ground. Read more
The New Yorker iPad App Launches
The New Yorker, an American magazine of reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry published by Condé Nast, was released today for iPad. Read the editors’ note about the app.
What’s cool: A video with Jason Schwartzman (directed by Roman Coppola) demonstrating the app, and the use of the Digital Magazine Solution from Adobe. What’s not cool - $5 an issue; a printed subscription is way cheaper. Demo video after the break. Read more
Found Footage: iOS 4.1 Jailbreak on iPod Touch 4G
Earlier today the Dev Team posted a new entry on their official blog showing a video of the upcoming “SHAtter” exploit making possible to jailbreak iOS 4.1 The video shows a jailbroken iPod Touch 4th generation with Cydia installed and running, root access and battery percentage enabled. Read more
Rampant View Headcam: $34.95. Dental surgery: $10000. Getting 100,000 views for your first-person faceplant? Priceless.
iPod Nano Headcam.: For When You Want People To Really Feel That Faceplant!
Gourmet Live and Rewarding Experiences→
Gourmet Live and Rewarding Experiences
Gourmet Live is something new, and interesting, and I’m excited that Gourmet Live is doing so well — as I write this, it’s the #1 iPad Lifestyle app in the store, and just below the Top 10 for free apps overall. But I’m far more proud of the ideas that inform and inspire it, because while the app is just in its very first version, the ideas are deep enough to support Gourmet Live evolving into something truly fantastic. So I thought I’d offer a little peek behind the scenes, because I think it represents something new, and it’s gonna take a ton of insight from a bigger community to help it reach its potential.
As John Gruber reminds us, Gourmet is now only an iPad app.
‘Free’ iPhones for UK Medical Students
The United Kingdom’s Leeds University is ‘giving’ Apple iPhone 3GSs to its fourth and fifth-year medical students in a new educational initiative. The University’s press release published the message that ‘Generation Y’ student doctors are skipping textbooks for iPhones. Read more